Sales

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A sale is the act of selling a product or service in return for money or other
compensation.
[1]
Signalling completion of the prospective stage, it is the beginning of an engagement
between customer and vendor or the extension of that engagement.
The seller or salesperson – the provider of the goods or services – completes a sale in response to
an acquisition or to anappropriation
[2]
or to a request. There follows the passing of title (property or
ownership) in the item, and the application and due settlement of a price, the obligation for which
arises due to the seller's requirement to pass ownership. Ideally, a seller agrees upon a price at
which he willingly parts with ownership of or any claim upon the item. The purchaser, though a party
to the sale, does not execute the sale, only the seller does that. To be precise the sale completes
prior to the payment and gives rise to the obligation of payment. If the seller completes the first two
above stages (consent and passing ownership) of the sale prior to settlement of the price, the sale
remains valid and gives rise to an obligation to pay.

Contents
[hide]
 1 Sales methods
 2 Sales agents
o 2.1 Inside sales vs. Outside sales
 3 The relationships between sales and marketing
o 3.1 Industrial marketing
 4 Sales and marketing alignment and integration
 5 See also
 6 References
Sales methods[edit]

A beach salesman showing necklaces to a tourist in Mexico.
A sale can take place through:
[3]

 Direct sales, involving person to person contact
 Pro forma sales
 Agency-based
 Sales agents (for example in real estate or in manufacturing)
 Sales outsourcing through direct branded representation
 Transaction sales
 Consultative sales
 Complex sales
 Consignment
 Telemarketing or telesales
 Retail or consumer
 Traveling salesman
 Door-to-door methods
 hawking
 Request for proposal – An invitation for suppliers, through a bidding process, to submit a
proposal on a specific product or service. An RFP usually represents part of a complex sales
process, also known as "enterprise sales".
 Business-to-business – Business-to-business ("B2B") sales are much more relationship-based
owing to the lack of emotional attachment
[citation needed]
to the products in question.
Industrial/professional sales involves selling from one business to another
 Electronic
 Web – Business-to-business ("B2B") and business-to-consumer ("B2C")
 Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) – A set of standard for structuring information to be
electronically exchanged between and within businesses
 Indirect, human-mediated but with indirect contact
 Mail-order
 vending machine
 Sales Techniques:
 Selling technique
 Consultative selling
 Sales enablement
 Solution selling
 Conceptual selling
 Strategic selling
 Transactional selling
 Sales Negotiation
 Reverse Selling
 Upselling
 Cross-selling
 Paint-the-Picture
 take away
 Sales Habits
 Relationship Selling
Sales agents[edit]
Agents in the sales process can represent either of two parties in the sales process; for example:
1. Sales broker, Seller agency, seller agent, seller representative: This is a traditional role
where the salesman represents a person or company on the selling end of a deal.
2. Buyers broker or Buyer brokerage: This is where the salesman represents the consumer
making the purchase. This is most often applied in large transactions.
3. Disclosed dual agent:This is where the salesman represents both parties in the sale and acts
as a mediator for the transaction. The role of the salesman here is to oversee that both
parties receive an honest and fair deal, and is responsible to both.
4. Transaction broker: This is where the salesperson represents neither party but handles the
transaction only. The seller owes no responsibility to either party getting a fair or honest
deal, just that all of the papers are handled properly.
5. Sales outsourcing involves direct branded representation where the sales representatives
are recruited, hired, and managed by an external entity but hold quotas, represent
themselves as the brand of the client, and report all activities (through their own sales
management channels) back to the client. It is akin to a virtual extension of a sales force
(see sales outsourcing).
6. Sales managers aim to implement various sales strategies and management techniques in
order to facilitate improved profits and increased sales volume. They are also responsible for
coordinating the sales and marketing department as well as oversight concerning
the fair and honest execution of the sales process by their agents.
7. Salesperson: The primary function of professional sales is to generate and close leads,
educate prospects, fill needs and satisfy wants of consumers appropriately, and therefore
turn prospective customers into actual ones. Questioning – to understand a customer's goal
and requirements relevant to the product – and the creation of a valuable solution by
communicating the necessary information that encourages a buyer to achieve their goal at
an economic cost comprise the functions of the salesperson or of the sales engine (for
example, the Internet, a vending machine, etc.). A good salesperson should never mis-sell
or over-evaluate the customer's requirements.
Inside sales vs. Outside sales[edit]
Since the advent of the telephone, a distinction has been made
[4]
between "inside sales" and "outside
sales" although it is generally agreed that those terms have no hard-and-fast definition.
[5]
In the
United States, the Fair Labor Standards Act defines outside sales representatives as "employees
[who] sell their employer's products, services, or facilities to customers away from their employer's
place(s) of business, in general, either at the customer's place of business or by selling door-to-door
at the customer's home" while defining those who work "from the employer's location" as inside
sales.
[6]
Inside sales generally involves attempting to close business primarily over the phone
via telemarketing, while outside sales (or "field" sales) will usually involve initial phone work to book
sales calls at the potential buyer's location to attempt to close the deal in person. Some companies
have an inside sales department that works with outside representatives and book their
appointments for them. Inside sales sometimes refers to upselling to existing customers.
The relationships between sales and marketing[edit]
Marketing and sales differ greatly, but have the same goal. Selling is the final stage in Marketing,
which also includes Pricing, Promotion, Positioning and Product (the 4 P's). A marketing department
in an organization has the goals of increasing the desirability and value to the customer and
increasing the number and engagement of interactions between potential customers and the
organization. Achieving this goal may involve the sales team using promotional techniques such
as advertising,sales promotion, publicity, and public relations, creating new sales channels, or
creating new products (new product development), among other things. It can also include bringing
the potential customer to visit the organization's website(s) for more information, or to contact the
organization for more information, or to interact with the organization via social media such
as Twitter, Facebook and blogs.
The field of sales process engineering views "sales" as the output of a larger system, not just as the
output of one department. The larger system includes many functional areas within an organization.
From this perspective, "sales" and "marketing" (among others, such as "customer service") label for
a number of processes whose inputs and outputs supply one another to varying degrees. In this
context, improving an "output" (such as sales) involves studying and improving the broader sales
process, as in any system, since the component functional areas interact and are interdependent.
[7]

Most large corporations structure their marketing departments in a similar fashion to sales
departments
[citation needed]
and the managers of these teams must coordinate efforts in order to drive
profits and business success. For example, an "inbound" focused campaign seeks to drive more
customers "through the door", giving the sales department a better chance of selling their product to
the consumer. A good marketing program would address any potential downsides as well.
The sales department would aim to improve the interaction between the customer and the sales
facility or mechanism (example, web site) and/or salesperson. Sales management would break
down the selling process and then increase the effectiveness of the discrete processes as well as
the interaction between processes. For example, in many out-bound sales environments, the typical
process includes out-bound calling, the sales pitch, handling objections, opportunity identification,
and the close. Each step of the process has sales-related issues, skills, and training needs, as well
as marketing solutions to improve each discrete step, as well as the whole process.
One further common complication of marketing involves the inability to measure results for a great
deal of marketing initiatives. In essence, many marketing and advertising executives often lose sight
of the objective of sales/revenue/profit, as they focus on establishing a creative/innovative program,
without concern for thetop or bottom lines - a fundamental pitfall of marketing for marketing's sake.
Many companies find it challenging to get marketing and sales on the same page.
[8]
The two
departments, although different in nature, handle very similar concepts and have to work together for
sales to be successful. Building a good relationship between the two that encourages
communication can be the key to success - even in a down economy.
[9]

Industrial marketing[edit]
The idea that marketing can potentially eliminate the need for sales people depends entirely on
context. For example, this may be possible in some B2C situations; however, for
many B2B transactions (for example, those involving industrial organizations) this is mostly
impossible.
[citation needed]
Another dimension is the value of the goods being sold. Fast-moving consumer-
goods (FMCG) require no sales people at the point of sale to get them to jump off the supermarket
shelf and into the customer's trolley. However, the purchase of large mining equipment worth
millions of dollars will require a sales person to manage the sales process - particularly in the face of
competitors. Small and medium businesses selling such large ticket items to a geographically-
disperse client base use Manufacturers' representatives to provide these highly personal service
while avoiding the large expense of a captive sales force.
Sales and marketing alignment and integration[edit]
Another area of discussion involves the need for alignment and integration between corporate sales
and marketing functions. According to a report from the Chief Marketing Officer (CMO) Council, only
40 percent of companies have formal programs, systems or processes in place to align and integrate
the two critical functions.
Traditionally, these two functions, as referenced above, have operated separately, left in siloed
areas of tactical responsibility. Glen Petersen’s book The Profit Maximization Paradox
[10]
sees the
changes in the competitive landscape between the 1950s and the time of writing as so dramatic that
the complexity of choice, price and opportunities for the customer forced this seemingly simple and
integrated relationship between sales and marketing to change forever. Petersen goes on to
highlight that salespeople spend approximately 40 percent of their time preparing customer-facing
deliverables while leveraging less than 50 percent of the materials created by marketing, adding to
perceptions that marketing is out of touch with the customer and that sales is resistant
to messaging and strategy.
See also[edit]

Look up sale in
Wiktionary, the free
dictionary.
 Buzzword
 Choice architecture
 Customer service
 Demand chain
 Manufacturers' representative
 Point of sale
 Retailing
 Sales (accounting)
 Sales effectiveness
 Sales incentive plan
 Sales contest
 Sales process engineering
 Sales management
 Sales territory
 Sales variance
 Selling
 Trade
 Transaction
 Vendor
 VisitBasis

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